Cherry Valley Feeder Gnome Shaped Bird House
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Gnome Shaped Bird Feeder. Fun feeder design. Great for backyard birding enthusiasts.
Price: $15.00
The seeds you offer in your seed bird feeder will decide the type of feeder you need to use and the types of birds that will be attracted to your garden. Lets take a look at your options for seed, feeders and the type of birds you can expect to attract. There are basically eight feeds and feed options
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Gnome Shaped Bird Feeder. Fun feeder design. Great for backyard birding enthusiasts.
Price: $15.00
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6 Room, Purple Martin House & Pole Kit, Constructed Of Tough & Long Lasting Rust Free Heat Dispensing Aluminum, 15′ Telescoping Pole Made Of Steel, Raise Or Lower Your Martin House With Easy Key Locks, Comes Complete With Railings & Door Stops.
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WoodMarvels.com sells laser-cut kits, EPS files and measurement free digital plans over the internet at WoodMarvels.com. This simple bird feeder is built extra tough for the outdoor elements.
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A Bluejay and some female House Finches on a feeding frenzy!!! This was during a snow storm bringing over 2ft. to the area Feb 6, 2010. And yes, that noise is Left 4 Dead 2 in the background.
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www.shtfmilitia.com DIY Grass Beds / Feeders For Chickens by Johnny How to make grass beds for chickens, I am not sure how this will work out it is just something I have wanted to try for a very long time. Materials: Chafing Pans Stucco wire or gutter screen zip ties or tying wire grass seed or sod and your soil of choice (we used top soil and peat moss) Optional – Use an under the bed container as a green house to stimulate the grass growth. Tools: Something sharp to poke holes (we used a GIG and leather man scissors) Scissors or wire cutters (depends on if your using plastic or metal screen) Small shovel or your hands Basically what we are doing is taking a chaffing pan poking some holes in it and adding some peat moss and topsoil in then mixing in grass seed. Then we cover the top with some simple plastic or metal stucco wire or gutter screen and zip tying into place. Then we placed in an under the bed container that we flipped up-side down to make a small green house. The idea behind this is to make a couple of them and rotate them with the chickens so when they eat one you can replace it with another while the other one grows back. The screen is to try to prevent them from killing the whole grass roots by keeping a buffer zone between the chickens and the grass. www.shtfmilitia.com
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This is a pair of House Finches – the male is red and I believe the brown bird is the female, although it might be a different bird – feeding at the seed feeder by my front porch. They took off when the UPS truck rumbled by. Apologies for the not-so-great quality. It’s my first video post here.
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squirrels kept eating our bird food so we attached a boat motor to the base and had the an extension cord attached all the way to the inside of our house. whenever a squirrel tried to hop on our bird feeder we just flicked a switch and
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Purple Finches – Adults have a short forked brown tail and brown wings and are about 15 cm (4 in) in length and weigh 34 g (1.2 oz). Adult males are raspberry red on the head, breast, back and rump; their back is streaked. Adult females have light brown upperparts and white underparts with dark brown streaks throughout; they have a white line on the face above the eye. Their breeding habitat is coniferous and mixed forest in Canada and the northeastern United States, as well as various wooded areas along the US Pacific coast. They nest on a horizontal branch or in a fork of a tree. Birds from northern Canada migrate to the southern United States; other birds are permanent residents. The Purple Finch population has declined sharply in the East due to the House Finch. Most of the time, when these two species collide, the House Finch out competes the Purple Finch. This bird has been also displaced from some habitat by the introduced House Sparrow. These birds forage in trees and bushes, sometimes in ground vegetation. They mainly eat seeds, berries and insects. They are fond of sunflower seeds, millet, and thistle.
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squirrel attacking my bird feeder. now I know why all my bird seed is going so fast!